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Comprehensive Genomic Profiling Of 295 Cases of Clinically Advanced Urothelial Carcinoma of the Urinary Bladder Reveals a High Frequency of Clinically Relevant Genomic Alterations JS Ross1,2, K Wang2, D Khaira2, SM Ali2, HAG Fisher1, B Mian1, T Nazeer1,JA Elvin2, J Chmielecki2, N Palma2, R Yelensky2, D Lipson2, VA Miller2, PJ Stephens2, V Subbiah3, S Pal4 1Albany Medical College Albany, NY, 2Foundation Medicine, Inc., Cambridge, MA, 3The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, 4City of Hope Cancer Center, Duarte, CA abstract #141112 Background • When cancer of the urinary bladder progresses to incurable metastatic disease, it is a major cause of morbidity and mortality around the world • Although standard of care cytotoxic therapies can provide significant benefit and new strategies of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy have recently emerged • Despite significant success of targeted anti-cancer therapy in other common solid tumors such as breast and lung cancer, patients with loco-regionally advanced and metastatic urothelial carcinoma (UC) currently have limited therapy options, especially as chemoresistance develops to standard anti-cancer therapies • Herein, we present a comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) study of UC designed to detect clinically relevant genomic alterations (CRGA) that could inform the selection of established and novel targeted therapies Presented by: Methods (1) • Hybridization capture of all coding exons of 236 cancer-related genes and selected introns of 19 genes commonly rearranged in cancer • ≥50ng of DNA extracted from 295 clinically advanced urothelial carcinoma specimen • All FFPE samples were sequenced to high (average >600X) with uniform coverage where no exon was sequenced at less than 100X • All classes of genomic alterations including base substitutions (sub), small indels, copy number alterations (CNA) and rearrangements/fusions were determined and then reported for these patient samples • Clinically relevant GA were defined as those identifying anti-cancer drugs on the market or in registered clinical trials (CT). Presented by: Methods (2) Post-Analytic Process Pre-Analytic Process (Pre-Sequencing) (Post-Sequencing)) 1) DNA/RNA extraction: 2) LC, Hybrid Capture: Extensive optimization Extensive optimization Presented by: 3) Analysis pipeline: Advanced computational biology 4) Clinical report: Resource intensive Results (1) • There were 75% male and 25% female patients with a mean age of 66 years • 295/295 (100%) of UC were high grade 295/295 (100%) of UC were advanced stage (III and IV) • 294/295 (99.7%) UC featured at least 1 genomic alteration (GA) on comprehensive profiling with a mean of 6.4 GA/UC – 61% SUB + INDEL – 37% CNA – 2% fusions. Presented by: Results (2) • 275 (93%) UC had at least 1 CRGA involving 75 individual genes with a mean of 2.6 CRGA/UC • The most common clinically relevant GA (CRGA) involved – CDKN2A (34%) – FGFR3 (21% – PIK3CA (20%) – ERBB2 (17%). • FGFR3 GA were of diverse type and included 10% fusions. • ERBB2 GA were equally divided between amplifications (CNA) and SUB. • ERBB2 SUB were predominantly in the extracellular domain and were highly enriched in the micropapillary UC subgroup. Presented by: Most Frequent Genomic Alterations Fusion/ Deletion Rearrangement Total count % of samples Gene Subsitution Truncation Amplification TP53 108 54 0 2 0 164 55.6% CDKN2A 11 9 0 81 0 101 34.2% CDKN2B 0 0 0 79 0 79 26.8% ARID1A 3 73 0 0 0 76 25.8% MLL2 0 68 0 0 1 69 23.4% KDM6A 0 59 0 5 0 64 21.7% FGFR3 53 2 1 0 7 63 21.4% PIK3CA 58 0 1 0 0 59 20.0% RB1 0 46 0 8 1 55 18.6% ERBB2 22 1 26 0 0 49 16.6% Presented by: % of samples Distribution of Genomic Alterations in 295 Advanced Urothelial Carcinomas Presented by: )& of Micropapillary Urothelial Carcinomas ERBB2 Mutations in 6 Cases Figure&2&(Ross (Case&1)& ERBB2:"S310F" TP53:"R282W" FBXW7:"G423V" (Case&2)& ERBB2:"S310F" TP53:"E294fs*52" CCND1:"amplifica<on"" MYCL1:"amplifica<on" EPHA3:"amplifica<on" PTEN:"Q298*" MSH2:""S612*" " ERBB2 TP53 RB1 MCL1 (case&3)& ARID1A CCND1 RICTOR MYCL1 MLL2 EGFR RUNX1 RAF1 PTEN (Case& 7)& PTCH1 PIK3R1 PIK3CA NF2 MSH2 MDM2 KRAS JAK2 (Case& 9)& IRS2 IDH2 HRAS FBXW7 EPHA3 CCNE1 CCND3 BAP1 (Case&15)& AURKA AKT2 AKT1 ERBB2:"S310Y" ARID1A:"V661fs*158" BAP1:8loss8 MCL1:"amplifica<on" ERBB2:"R157W" • The micropapillary variant of urothelial carcinoma, a known clinically aggressive subtype of urinary bladder cancer, harbors an unprecedented high frequency of ERBB2 mutations especially in the extracellular regulatory domain of the ERBB2 gene • IHC and FISH will not identify UC that hoarbors a nonamplification ERBB2 sequence alteration • The well-documented aggressive clinical course attributed to MPUC has also been linked to micropapillary carcinomas of the endometrium, breast and lung, however, no association with ERBB2 mutations in these other aggressive types of micropapillary carcinomas has been reported to date • Preliminary evidence suggests that ERBB2-mutated MPUC may respond to anti-ERBB2 targeting agent ERBB2:8S310F" TP53:8G244S" RB1:8Q762*" ARID1A:8E1767*" NF2:"E463K" 2 9 15 Substitution/Indel 3 1 7 4 Gene amplification 6 ERBB2:8S310F" RB1:8Q344*" EGFR:"amplifica<on8 MDM2:"amplifica<on" MCL1:" amplifica<on" 5 13 12 8 11 Gene homozygous deletion 10 14 Truncation Presented by: 65 year old male with high grade stage IV urothelial carcinoma of the bladder Presented by: • Advanced high grade UC invading through the bladder wall into the perivesicle fat at total cystectomy • The copy number plot from the CGP assay revealed amplification of ERBB2 (HER2) at 40 copies • Base substitutions in TP53 R280T and ARID1A Q611*, S614* were also identified • This tumor would be HER2 positive by either IHC or FISH • Clinical trials of HER2 targeting agents in ERBB2 (HER2) amplified UC are ongoing FGFR3-TACC3 Fusion in UC FGFR3% FGFR (3%) TACC3 FGFR3)TACC3%fusion'gene' (3%) Fusion Gene TACC3% Ex'2416' Ex'1418' !!!!!!!aa1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!aa794!!!!!!aa1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!aa838! Protein'domains' 'Ig'''''''''I4set''''I4set' TM' PKinase' TACC' Presented by: • 66 year old female patient with high grade trans-mural UC progressed to stage IV disease post-cystectomy • On comprehensive genomic profiling this tumor featured an FGFR3-TACC3 fusion as well as CDKN2A/B loss, MDM2 amplification and the MLL2 G5467fs*20 mutation • 21.4% of the UC in this study harbored alterations of FGFR3 including base substitutions (83%), amplifications (2%) and fusions (11%) NTM-FGFR1 Fusion Driven Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma Responds to Pazopanib + Everolimus FGFR1% NTM% FGFR1-NTM FGFR1)NTM% Rearrangement !!!!!!!!!!!!!noncoding!!!!!!aa29!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!aa344! A 73 year old male patient with relapsed metastatic urothelial carcinoma. After a 6 year interval post cysto-prostatectomy. Various cytotoxic therapy regimens were not effective and associated with significant adverse events. Comprehensive genomic profiling was performed and revealed an FGFR1-NTM rearrangement as well as amplifications of CCND3 ,CDK4, MCL1, MDM2 and MYC genes. Images to the right demonstrate response of a lung metastasis to treatment with the FGFR inhibitor, pazopanib and the MTOR inhibitor, everolimus. Presented by: ERBB2 insertion mutation A775_G776insYVMA In Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma • Liver biopsy showing high grade metastatic urothelial carcinoma in a 49 year old man • Genomic profiling revealed an ERBB2 insertion mutation A775_G776insYVMA, CDKN2A/B loss and CREBBP S893L substitution • In the bladder urothelial carcinoma TCGA dataset, mutation of ERBB2 has been found in 14.3% (4/28) of cases • Preclinical assays have demonstrated that this ERBB2 mutation can transform cells that were sensitive to lapatinib and trastuzumab • ERBB2 kinase and extra-cellular domain mutations are not detected by IHC and FISH Presented by: NF2 Deletion in Advanced UC Responds to Everolimus • A 60 year old female post neo-adjuvant cisplatin and gemcitabine with cystectomy showing advanced UC • After tumor progression, CGP revealed alterations in NF2 Y153*1 (minor allele frequency [MAF]: 7%), ATM V2119fs*8 (MAF: 8%), ATR splice site 7349+2T>C (MAF: 44%), and TP53 R280K (MAF: 6%) • Given preclinical work suggesting NF2 loss may be associated with sensitivity to MTOR inhibitors, the patient was started on everolimus and paclitaxel using a dosing regimen currently being examined in a phase II study in urothelial carcinoma (everolimus at 10 mg oral daily and paclitaxel at 80 mg/m2 intravenous weekly) • Imaging over 11 months of therapy with this regimen has demonstrated continued regression of the vaginal cuff lesion and disappearance of the previously noted iliac adenopathy Presented by: FGFR3 Amplification and Base Substitution in UC with Response to Pazopanib • 67 year old female patient with relapsed /refractory urothelial carcinoma • On comprehensive genomic profiling, the tumor harbored amplification of FGFR3 (11 copies), CCND1 (21 copies), and FGF19 (21 copies) and an FGFR3 S249C mutation with estimated mutant allele frequencies (MAF) of 58% respectively • On the basis of these findings, the patient was initiated on pazopanib • After 3 months of therapy, the patient mounted a RECIST-defined partial response (PR) which has been maintained in excess of 6 months of follow-up Baseline Presented by: 6 Months Conclusions • Using a CGP assay capable of detecting all classes of GA simultaneously, an extraordinary high frequency of CRGA were identified in a large series of patients with clinically advanced UC • More than one-third of these relapsed/refractory cases of UC harbored alterations in NF2, FGFR3 and ERBB2 with selected patients showing active responses to targeted therapies • Continued evaluation of CGP for UC and the development of genomic driven clinical trials designed to employ targeted agents potentially in combination with cytotoxic drugs for this challenging disease appears warranted. Presented by: